The rest is what I already said - preying on our human instincts to survive and avoid death. — I like sushi
What I’m thinking of is the idea that we’ve created something, a runaway virus, that’s escaped our control, almost like an A.I. that’s turned on us. — Brett
It doesn’t share the same objectives or sense of ethics. It’s contrary to everything we are. — Brett
What a refreshing post. — Brett
In what form should we try to grasp this reality, what language? Or is there a new language to be learned, a new mental state required to move into the future? — Brett
It’s like something’s happening and we can’t grasp it, we have no experience to fall back on. All we see is the world fed to us in old images: jackboots, martyrs, apocalyptic cities, tyrants, storm clouds, angry men and weeping women. Tired, cliched images empty of meaning, a B- grade movie. And worse, we try to make meaning out of those hackneyed images. — Brett
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HsHtSPub3w8In societies where modern conditions of production prevail, all of life presents itself as an immense accumulation of spectacles. Everything that was directly lived has moved away into a representation.
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The spectacle is not a collection of images, but a social relation among people, mediated by images.
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This is the principle of commodity fetishism, the domination of society by “intangible as well as tangible things,” which reaches its absolute fulfillment in the spectacle, where the tangible world is replaced by a selection of images which exist above it, and which simultaneously impose themselves as the tangible par excellence.
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The celebrity, the spectacular representation of a living human being, embodies this banality by embodying the image of a possible role. Being a star means specializing in the seemingly lived; the star is the object of identification with the shallow seeming life that has to compensate for the fragmented productive specializations which are actually lived. Celebrities exist to act out various styles of living and viewing society unfettered, free to express themselves globally. They embody the inaccessible result of social labor by dramatizing its by-products magically projected above it as its goal: power and vacations, decision and consumption, which are the beginning and end of an undiscussed process.
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The consumption celebrity superficially represents different types of personality and shows each of these types having equal access to the totality of consumption and finding similar happiness there. — Debord
I like the idea of calling this thing “AI”, it makes some sense, gives it some form we can comprehend. It’s not as we imagined (how slow we are); some robotic, computerised creature, but something far more sophisticated, and invisible. — Brett
The media, is that what you mean? — Brett
I think you'd be interested in some media studies. — Wayfarer
What the media, including the Internet, has done is allow the development of a universal unconsciousness, or maybe a universal consciousness (I’m not sure), that contains more ideas and beliefs, more signs than a single mind has so far had to cope with.
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This “world” is made up elements like headlines and images, archetypal in their simplicity and delivered to us rapidly without real explanation or even meaning: the burning building, the car crash, the shootings, the tyrant, the armies, the warlords, the burning forests, the angry mob, the weeping woman, they’re mythical images that come and go like takeaways, eroded of meaning but still having a shadow. Through these images, weak as they might be, we interpret the world, or struggle with it.
But there is no world like that, where everything happens in one place at the same time, every second of the day, that goes with us wherever and whatever we do. — Brett
Now the images appear on television, on the side of a bus, on a pack of cigarettes or your child’s t-shirt. — Brett
So this “world” is possibly something very primitive, acted out, or renewed, in a modern condition. Like a primitive language taking on a guise in a new world, taking us back to the primitive beings we were. — Brett
Does informed necessarily mean enlightened? Not in a spiritual sense but in knowing. — Brett
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